I, I Believe, I Believe That, I Believe That We
All Things Constitution
Political Participation and Linkage Institutions
The Branches of Government
All Things Civil and Uncivil
100

This political ideology, belonging to public figures such as Liz Cheney, Mike Pence, and Ron DeSantis, emphasis limited government.

What is conservatism?

100

This Article of the Constitution describes interstate relations.

What is Article IV?

100

This function of the media can keep politicians out of trouble, just don't ask them to sit or give them a bone

What is watchdog?

100

This is the only institution in government that can initiate both tax legislation and impeachments.

What is the House of Representatives?

100

This clause of the First Amendment prohibits school prayer.

What is the establishment clause?

200

The phenomenon where men and women tend to support candidates of different political parties, first appearing in the 1980 presidential election.

What is the gender gap?

200

Feeling hungry?  This model of federalism, in which states and the federal government have intersecting, overlapping responsibilities, may just satisfy your appetite.

What is cooperative/marble-cake federalism?

200

This interest group strategy involves mass mailing, letter-writing, and using social media to reach as large an audience as possible, and then have them contact government to influence policy.

What is grassroots mobilisation?

200

Originating from a Dutch word, this is the most famous -- or infamous -- obstruction tactic in the Senate

What is a filibuster?

200

Like freedom from unequal treatment because of gender, these are protected by government action, including a landmark 1965 law

What are civil rights?

300

While roughly 67% of this racial/ethnic group traditionally supports Democratic presidential candidates, they were notable in 2020 for increasing their support for Republicans in 2020

What are Hispanics/Latinx?

300

Sure, you can change the Constitution, once this many states agree to the amendment.

What is 3/4ths?

300

Good polls know they are inexact because they will tell you exactly how inexact they are with this statistic.

What is sampling error/margin of error?

300

A president in their last term, awaiting the inauguration of a new president.  Just don't expect them to quack.

What is a lame duck?

300

This Amendment guarantees a trial by jury and the right to counsel.

What is the Sixth Amendment?

400

This term refers to the concept in the United States that all individuals should have the same chances to be successful in life, not necessarily the same results

What is equality of opportunity?

400

Roger Sherman of this state proposed a compromise at the Constitutional Convention that answered the question of how states would be represented in the Legislature

What is Connecticut?

400

Sometimes you get a new party in power, sometimes you get a new electoral coalition, but either way, it is this kind of election is a "big deal."

What is a critical/realigning election?

400

While you can certainly protest on the steps of the Supreme Court, if you really want the justices to listen to you, you'd better file one of these instead.

What are amicus briefs?

400

If this type of speech causes violence as soon as it is uttered, it certainly fails this Schenck-era test.

What is the "clear and present danger" test?

500

Conservative Christians supported Donald Trump in 2016, in hopes he would appoint members of the judiciary willing to overturn this 1973 decision.

What is Roe v. Wade?

500

Sometimes the federal government uses these "punishments" to influence policy in a completely different and unrelated policy area.

What are crossover sanctions?

500

You won't stop them with kryptonite, but this independent, expenditure-only entity spends big in elections and influences policy on behalf of special interests.

What is a superPAC?

500

This 1939 law prevents certain government employees from engaging in political activity, and ensures they advance based on merit

What is the Hatch Act?

500

This doctrine, overturned in Brown v. Board in 1954, justified segregated facilities, as long as they were, or at least purported to be, equivalent to one another

What is "separate but equal?"